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Statement by George Lodge, prepared for delivery before the
Subcommittee on Western Hemisphere Affairs of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, June 24, 1969, at hearings on
U.S. military programs in Latin America.
Although I am not a specialist on U.S. military programs in Latin
America, I believe that their effect is now at least partly and per-
haps seriously contrary to our national interest. It is wrong, how-
ever, to blame the military. The blame belongs to those who define
our national interests, fix our objectives, design our policy and
construct our programs. For the most part these are highly placed
civilians.
It is impossible to separate U.S. military policy in Latin America
from the totality of U.S. policy and program, which in general is badly
askew,
Allow me to put the case generally first. Profound and irrevers-
ible change in the social, political and economic structures of most
of Latin America is underway.* This change appears to be inevitable;
its introduction desirable according to many criteria; and the degree
of accompanying violence and conflict uncertain, It is of revolutionary
proportions involving fundamental reallocation of power, land and
wealth; the emergence of new socio-political machinery; the design
of new relationships between states within the region and between the
region and the world.
The rights and wrongs of this change process are not as relevant
to U.S. interests and policy as is its inevitability and the high risk
which it carries to peace and survival. In this light, quite apart
from the morality of change, it becomes a matter of overriding U.S.
interest to understand the change process, to devote considerably more
time and effort to the effective design and operation of engines of
change, and to realign our actions so that we harmonize with Latin
American forces of change instead of clash against them; this all in
the hope of making the overall process as orderly and peaceful as
possible.
In Latin America, to borrow a phrase used by President Nixon in
another context, we have "lost the ,Vision indispensible to great
leadership." We have been far too slow in recognizing reality
* There are some exception- Mexico and Cuba have had their
revolutions, attended by years of bloody violence in one case and
grave threat to world peace in the other. Venezuela may have shown
the way to a new variety of peaceful revolution. Bolivia's case is
still uncertain, as is that of Chile
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and in perceiving our vital interests accordingly, As of today, the
United States government and to a lesser extent U.S. business is or
appears to be deeply committed to the maintenance of the status quo.
Our military and economic assistance programs during the 1960's have
increased the level and degree of this commitment in spite of the fact
that the purposes of the Alliance for Progress were, of course, quite
different. This distortion does not seem to have been intentional but
rather the unwitting effect of the following six failures:
to We have failed to realize that changes required for what is
generally labelled "economic development" are radical and structural
and cannot occur unless there are socio-political institutions (engines
of change) in place which can provide the motivation, organization,
protection, authority and competence which are essential to break down
old structures and build new ones. In Latin America these include rural
and urban worker organizations, many different groups affiliated with
the radical action element of the Roman Catholic Church, cooperatives,
some university activities, and various business enterprises, particu-
larly those engaged in integrated food production, processing and
distribution,
2. We have failed to perceive that most Latin American govern-
ments have neither the capacity nor the will to introduce the radical -
indeed the revolutionary - change which was promised at Punta del Este.
We have paid them to promise to do what no government can do: namely,
to subvert the power base upon which it rests. In so doing we have
corrupted them and ourselves.
3e We have failed to recognize that although we regularly pledge
ourselves to support change, we have militarily and economically, in
fact, strengthened the obstacles to change, prolonging the status quo
and thus frustrating development. Governments of both the United States
and Latin America have been able to ignore this fundamental contra-
diction between words and actions largely because of a higher commit-
ment to "anti-communism", a notion which today has become hollow, vague
and misleading, defined differently depending on one's interests.
4. We have failed to acknowledge that in fact today the Communist
Party apparatus generally in Latin America is neither a revolutionary
force nor a major threat to U.S. interests, Consequently we have failed
to appreciate that the ideology of "anti-communism" is no longer either
valid or useful. The least significant thing about Castro is that he
is a communist. The most radical elements in Brazil today are not the
communists but priests and their worker, student followers. The
guerrillas in Guatemala are more properly described as revolutionary
nationalists than as members of the International Communist Party or
as tools of Moscow or Peking,. Such groups may, of course, seek and
receive aid and comfort from Cuba, the USSR or Red China; and indeed
we have it within our power to escalate this relationship beyond its
present insignificant levels by continuing our support of the status quo.
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5. We have failed to perceive that the danger to peace in Latin
America is not from communism, but from predatory scavengers of the
revolutionary process - right or left, foreign or domestic - who seek
to use the chaos of change as a means for extension of control and
power. The task is to strengthen the change process and protect it
from their grasp.
6. We have failed to recognize that governments derive their leg-
itimacy and capability solely from the power and organization upon
which they rest. In Latin America this power and organization is
often the military, or the oligarchy; it is rarely the majority of the
nation. U.S. military and economic assistance to governments, there-
fore, constitutes intervention by the United States on behalf of the
power and the organization of the regime in office. This intervention
becomes particularly controversial and perhaps damaging when it ad-
versely affects the formation of political organizations which the
regime regards as hostile. Such organizations have in fact included
political parties, peasant and worker federations, radical Church
groups and revolutionary elements in such countries as Panama, the
Dominican Republic, El Salvador and Brazil. The dangers inherent in
such a policy might be clearer if we were to imagine that the Mexican
Revolution were going on today. Under our current military assistance
program we would be almost certainly deeply involved in that civil
struggle, with U.S. Special Forces probably hunting down Zapata who
in turn would understandably call on Havana and Moscow for help.
Moscow, which at present has no desire to become involved in such
activities, could hardly refuse such a plea.
The control of conflict requires the presence in any community -
national or international - of an effective police capable of appre-
hending and confining the bandit and the criminal. But in Latin
America banditry and criminality are neither the root nor the prin-
cipal potential cause of violence; and care must be taken not to con-
fuse such lawlessness with revolution, the right to which is deep in
our own political and moral heritage.
The cause of conflict in Latin America is related in large mea-
sure t' the desire of increasing numbers to achieve rights which we
cherish and which are in general accord with our definition of the
good community as set out in the Declaration of Independence. In the
context of the Latin American environment the achievement of these
rights requires reallocation of power and structural shifts which are
sufficiently radical to deserve the name of revolution. For these
reasons and because the revolution appears inevitable, it follows that
the political interests of the U.S. lie in closer cooperation with it.
We cannot win a war against the inevitable even though today we are
dangerously close to trying.
It thus becomes the interest of the United States to promote the
revolution in such a way that the threat of violent conflict, its
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predictable companion, is minimized. The revolution in Latin America
requires the full mobilization of those essentially political insti-
tutions which I have referred to as engines of change, and without which
genuine self-determination is impossible. At the same time the evolu-
tion of the structures of the status quo should be eased to the extent
possible.
To this end the total thrust of a new foreign assistance policy
of the United States should be directed at the purposes set by the
Alliance for Progress, but this policy is best achieved by dividing
programs into two general categories, those which work within existing
structures and those which are designed to introduce basic, structural
change. For this purpose AID, both in Washington and Latin America,
should be replaced by two principal alternative assistance channels
and perhaps several subsidiary ones.
The first channel, which we shall call the New Alliance for Prog-
ress, would be a multilateral structure directed by the Inter-American
Committee for the Alliance (Cl") receiving perhaps 70 per cent of
U.S. assistance for Latin America and utilizing a broad range of re.-
gional agencies, The second, called the American Foundation, Would
distribute about 25 per cent and would have the purpose of fueling
Latin American engines of change. The remainder might be distributed
through other routes, such as the overseas investment corporation which
has been proposed.*
Under such a scheme military, police and civil administration
training and assistance would be provided regiznally under the auspices
of the New Alliance. Bilateral military programs would be eliminated
except for instances where there was c' evidence of foreign aggres-
sion which local military units could, not c-)ntrol and where our treaty
obligations called for interven -L' on,
One of the most desirable effects of such a new arrangement would
be that the United States would be substantially relieved of blame for
sustaining any particular regime or element of the status quo. Any
effect of this sort would be the result of regional multilateral
decision and action. U.S. policy would thus become solidly oriented
toward sustaining the institutions of change and not those of the
status quo. Even though such an approach would be consistent with the
* I have described these proposed changes in more detail in an article
in the current issue of Foreign Affairs, "U.S. Aid to Latin America:
Funding Radical Change" and in a book to be published soon, Engines
of Chan a United States Interests and Revolution in Latin America,
(Alfred A.
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requirements for national self-determination, it would undoubtedly cause
protest from some who hold power in Latin America today. They will tend
to regard it as a policy of subversion, which in a sense it is. They
will speak of intervention in the internal political affairs of sover-
eign states, which it is. They should be reminded, however, that our
present policy also constitutes intervention, only on their behalf.
It is time to recognize that almost any foreign assistance or indeed
investment in Latin America is bound to be interventionary in one way
or another.
U.S. military doctrine currently appears to be: Latin America
threatens to become another Vietnam unless the U.S. helps the armed
forces provide a shield against `nsurgency while the governments build
a stable society.*
This is the argument that I presume underlies current U.S. military
aid to Latin America, the assignment by the Department of Defense of
U.S. military personnel throughout the hemisphere, and U.S. training
of Latin Americans, all of which costs about $100 million a year. This
is all to build and maintain a '9shiel d against insurgency", which pre-
sumably will seek and expect insurgents against which to exercise itself.
But who is an "insurgent"? In Guatemala not long ago two U. S.
1Karyknoll priests armed themselves against the vigilantes of the land-
owner who were harassing the peasant cooperative which the priests had
helped the Indians to organize. It is probably not stretching truth
to suggest that in this case we had U.S. trained and equipped soldiers
threatening to shoot up U.S. priests. More recently in Northeast
Brazil evidence suggests that priests have been harassed if not attacked
by the Brazilian military or at least by extreme right wing groups
which are supported by some military elements. That these priests, or
laymen like them, are called "communists" or "insurgents" does not
diminish the danger of such confrontations to U.S. interests. If the
Latin American military feels it necessary to engage in these sorts of
activities - and there is considerable evidence that it does - it
should not be with our help.
Closely related is the question: what are the governments the
military speaks of shielding? Few could be described as representa-
tive of the majority of the people in their jurisdiction. Their reach,
identity and control are extremely limited. There is little political
organizati"n through which the majority of the people can make their
* See John M. Goshko, Washinton Post, February 5, 1968, quoting
General Robert W. Porter, U.S. Southern Command.
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will felt. In most of rural Latin America the government is hardly a
meaningful entity at all. Power emanates from whoever may have it or
get it: the owner of a sugar mill, a landowner, the bishop, the army,
The above statement of military doctrine raises a third question:
what is the most effective way to cope with insurgency, assuming that
by that word we mean foreign aggression? Venezuela is perhaps a
relevant; example. There seems little doubt that Betancourt defeated
Castro's attempts at insurgency in Venezuela in the mid 1960's as much
by effective organization of the peasants and industrial workers as
by the at-my. As Victor Alba said of the events: "It was political
action trxat isolated the guerrillas and the terrorists, not the army
or the p:slice."
Lat:L.n American states need a constabulary to maintain order.
They may need a regional force upon which to call in the case of
foreign aggression or a foreign-supported activity such as that of
Che Guevara in Bolivia. Both of these needs can be filled within the
frameworl of a multilateral regional structure. Additional bilateral
U.S. prof-rams, except in extraordinary circumstances, are more likely
to threaten our interests than to serve them.
It is argued that the amount of U.S. military assistance to
Latin America is small. In a quantitative sense perhaps this is true.
In a poli.tical,ideological and symbolic sense, however, our military
programs are of substantial significance. They represent a particu-
larly tangible form of evidence that when confronted with the con-
tradictica between change and stability we opt for stability, and for
a fairly short-run, uncertain oligarchical form of stability at that.
And then it does not require much military power to control a country
like Panama.
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